On my
June 1 post, I talked about buying on Audible "In Kiltumper: A Year in an
Irish Garden." I mentioned that I don't listen to many audiobooks as my
vision remains fine and I love reading. There's a little message inside my head
that says: "Audiobooks are for endless drives across Wyoming." During
my 25 years at the Wyoming Arts Council, I made many drives across the
98,000-square mile state and listened to cassettes, disks, and, briefly, on one
overlooked Spotify intro subscription in a state auto.
So
many great memories of Janet Evanovich (perfect to distract a keyed-up driver
on I-80 winter drives), a dozen Wyoming-based mysteries by C.J. Box and Craig
Johnson, an odd Chuck Palahniuk novel on the way to Sheridan (weird scene in a
swimming pool), and one perfect summer drive to Jackson with geological
landmarks discussed in John McPhee's "Rising from the Plains." Kurt
Vonnegut's "Galapagos" got me all the way from Cheyenne to Salt Lake
City.
So
here I am, taking a break from the printed page and listening to the wonderful
voices of Niall Williams and Christine Breen on Audible. Twelve months in an
Irish garden. I am transfixed. My Irish roots and life-long gardening interests
are both addressed. In "March," an Irish priest dropped by the
narrators' little patch of land in County Clare, and conducted mass in the
garden. Neither Niall or Chris are active Catholics (more the fallen-away
variety) but both agree and it's glorious.
But
there was something about it.
Quote
from Chapter 4, April
"The moment of spring sets everything within me tremoring."
I've
felt it in Wyoming.
March
is filled with wind-whipped snowstorms. April's beginning can be much the same.
But there is a day when I step out to sun and calm. I look at the garden. A few
bulb plants bloom. It's still six weeks before I put seedlings in the
ground.
But
it's the light of those early April days that transform me. Every day the light
stretches out to those long summer days. On June 21, the western sky is still
lit at 10. I love and fear that day as days start to get shorter until it's
dark at 4:30 in late November, even at Halloween the kids gets started going
door to door before 5.
I have felt the tremoring Williams describes. Here in Florida, it is calmed by the coming of heat and humidity. By June 6, the tremoring has given way to sweat and sunburn.
